4.6 Article

The Effect of a Quality Improvement Intervention on Perceived Sleep Quality and Cognition in a Medical ICU

Journal

CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Volume 41, Issue 3, Pages 800-809

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e3182746442

Keywords

Cognition; delirium; ICU; outcome assessment; quality improvement; Richards-Campbell Sleep Questionnaire; sleep

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [F32 HL104901]
  2. Ruth L Kirschstein NRSA award

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Objectives: To determine if a quality improvement intervention improves sleep and delirium/cognition. Design: Observational, pre-post design. Setting: A tertiary academic hospital in the United States. Patients: 300 medical ICU patients. Interventions: This medical ICU-wide project involved a usual care baseline stage, followed by a quality improvement stage incorporating multifaceted sleep-promoting interventions implemented with the aid of daily reminder checklists for ICU staff. Measurements and Main Results: Primary ICU outcomes were perceived sleep quality and noise ratings (measured on a 0-100 scale using the valid and reliable Richards-Campbell Sleep Questionnaire) and delirium/coma-free days. Secondary outcomes included ICU and hospital length of stay and mortality. Post-ICU measures of cognition and perceived sleep quality were evaluated in an ICU patient subset. During the baseline and sleep quality improvement stages, there were 122 and 178 patients, respectively, with more than one night in the ICU, accounting for 634 and 826 patient-days. Within the groups, 78 (63.9%) and 83 (46.6%) patients received mechanical ventilation. Over the 826 patient-day quality improvement period, checklist item completion rates ranged from 86% to 94%. In multivariable regression analysis of the quality improvement vs. baseline stages, improvements in overall Richards-Campbell Sleep Questionnaire sleep quality ratings did not reach statistical significance, but there were significant improvements in daily noise ratings (mean +/- SD: 65.9 +/- 26.6 vs. 60.5 +/- 26.3, p = 0.001), incidence of delirium/coma (odds ratio: 0.46; 95% confidence interval,.0.23-0.89; p = 0.02), and daily delirium/coma-free status (odds ratio: 1.64; 95% confidence interval, 1.04-2.58; p = 0.03). Improvements in secondary ICU outcomes and post-ICU outcomes did not reach statistical significance. Conclusions: An ICU-wide quality improvement intervention to improve sleep and delirium is feasible and associated with significant improvements in perceived nighttime noise, incidence of delirium/coma, and daily delirium/coma-free status. Improvement in perceived sleep quality did not reach statistical significance. (Crit Care Med 2013; 41:800-809)

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